Plesiadapiformes ("
Adapid
Adapidae is a family of extinct primates that primarily radiated during the Eocene epoch between about 55 and 34 million years ago.
Adapid systematics and evolutionary relationships are controversial, but there is fairly good evidence from the ...
-like" or "near
Adapiformes") is a group of
Primates
Primates are a diverse order of mammals. They are divided into the strepsirrhines, which include the lemurs, galagos, and lorisids, and the haplorhines, which include the tarsiers and the simians (monkeys and apes, the latter including huma ...
, a sister of the
Dermoptera.
While none of the groups normally directly assigned to this group survived, the group appears actually not to be literally extinct (in the sense of having no living descendants) as the remaining
primates (the crown primates or "Euprimates") appear to be derived Plesiadapiformes, as a sister of e.g. the
Carpolestidae. The term Plesiadapiformes may still be used for all primates which are not crown primates, but this usage is
paraphyletic
In taxonomy (general), taxonomy, a group is paraphyletic if it consists of the group's most recent common ancestor, last common ancestor and most of its descendants, excluding a few Monophyly, monophyletic subgroups. The group is said to be pa ...
. When the crown primates are
cladistically granted, it becomes an obsolete junior synonym to primates. ''
Purgatorius'' is believed to be a basal Plesiadapiformes.
Plesiadapiformes first appear in the fossil record between 65 and 55 million years ago, although many were extinct by the beginning of the
Eocene. They may have been the first mammals to have
finger nails in place of
claws. In 1990, K.C. Beard attempted to link the Plesiadapiformes with the order Dermoptera. They proposed that paromomyid ''Phenacolemur'' had digital proportions of the fossil indicated gliding habits similar to that of colugos.
In the following simplified cladogram, the crown primates are found to be highly derived Plesiadapiformes, possibly as sister of the
Plesiadapoidea.
The crown primates are
cladistically granted here into the Plesiadapiformes, and the 'plesiadapiformes' become a junior synonym of the primates. With this tree, the plesiadapiformes are not literally extinct (in the sense of having no surviving descendants). The crown primates are also called "Euprimates" in this context.
Alternatively, in 2018, the plesiadapiform were proposed to be more related to Dermoptera, or roughly corresponding to Primatomorpha with both Dermoptera and the primates emerging within this group. Also in a 2020 paper, the primates and Dermoptera were jointly considered sister to the plesiadapiform Purgatoriidae, resulting in the following phylogenetic tree.
Traditionally, they were regarded as a separate extinct order of
Primatomorpha, but it now appears that groups such as the extant primates and/or the Dermoptera have emerged in the group.
One possible classification table of plesiadapiform families is listed below.
*PLESIADAPIFORMES
** Family
Micromomyidae
** Superfamily
Paromomyoidea
*** Family
Paromomyidae
*** Family
Picromomyidae
*** Family
Palaechthonidae
*** Family
Microsyopidae
** Superfamily
Plesiadapoidea
*** Family
Carpolestidae
*** Family
Chronolestidae
*** Family
Picrodontidae
*** Family
Plesiadapidae
*** Family
Saxonellidae
References
External links
Mikko's Phylogeny Archive
{{Taxonbar, from=Q426505
Mammal orders
Paleocene first appearances
Eocene extinctions
Paraphyletic groups